|
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115 |
- title: Google + 1yr
- url: https://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/201x/2015/03/29/Anniversaries
- hash_url: cd48ce5c2d83f8fa7b4c0a957db0d333
-
- <p itemprop="description">As of this month, I’ve been an ex-Googler for a year.
- Sometimes I miss it, but my rearview-mirror feelings are mixed.</p>
-
- <p id="p-1" class="p1"><span class="h2">What I miss</span> ·
- Most of all, the bug tracker. Any employee can file a bug against any
- product and be certain that someone on the engineering team will at
- least look at it. There are certain internal-social-engineering
- techniques you can use to focus attention on an issue you
- think isn’t getting enough. Lots of bug reports are feature-requests and
- others are feature-removal demands, and that’s fine.</p>
-
- <p>Given Google’s global impact, that bug tracker is one of the single
- most powerful world-changing tools that most people will never have access
- to.</p>
-
- <p>I also miss the high polish of the internal Google-apps deployment.
- When you put your working life 100% in the cloud, and have <em>really
- good</em> sharing and collaboration tools, the notion of “office documents”
- stored in “hard-drive files” becomes more and more self-evidently insane.
- This is obviously where the world is heading; I hope Google gets more
- good competition.</p>
-
- <p>I’m pretty meh on Google’s social efforts, but the internal G+ deployment
- was incredibly effective for community-building, self-organizing around one
- thing or another, and collectively laughing at the laughable.</p>
-
- <p>Being paid partly in Google shares in the period 2010-2014 was pretty
- pleasing. And yep, the food is everything they say; I wonder
- if the Cloud café is still operating? There are all the other perks and
- goodies you hear about, but they were a no-op for a remote worker like me.</p>
-
- <p>Working around lots of really super-smart people was nice, but I haven’t
- had to give that up, thank goodness.</p>
-
- <p id="p-2" class="p1"><span class="h2">Neutral</span> ·
- I’m broadly in sympathy with most of what Google’s trying to do. Most of
- the people who are paranoid about Google are mostly wrong. But yeah,
- individuals in Google’s management (and separately, Product Management)
- communities have immense power; and at the end of the day, they’re just
- people. Thus some of them are misguided sometimes, or have
- drunk too much Google kool-aid. Hint: Just because most of Google’s actions
- have improved the Internet doesn’t mean that anything that’s good for
- Google is good for the world, or for the Internet.</p>
-
- <p>Yeah, I thought that a few of the policy decisions I saw when
- I was in Android, and then in Identity, were some combination of crazy,
- misguided, and damaging. But at the end of the day, that’s not a gripe
- against Google; because there’s no company that doesn’t have
- occasionally-wrong employees.</p>
-
- <p>Google remains ahead of the industry pack on privacy, diversity, and
- community. But that is damning with faint praise.</p>
-
- <p>The number-one popular gripe against Google is that they’re watching
- everything we do online and using it to monetize us. That one doesn’t bother
- me in the slightest. The services are free so someone’s gotta pay the rent,
- and that’s the advertisers.</p>
-
- <p>Are you worried about Google (or Facebook or Twitter or your telephone
- company or Microsoft or Amazon) misusing the data they collect? That’s
- perfectly reasonable. And it’s also a <em>policy</em> problem, nothing to do
- with technology; the solutions lie in the domains of politics and law.</p>
-
- <p>I’m actually pretty optimistic that existing legislation and common law
- might suffice to whack anyone who really went off the rails
- in this domain.</p>
-
- <p>Also, I have trouble getting exercised about it when we’re facing a wave of
- horrible, toxic, pervasive privacy attacks from abusive governments and actual
- criminals.</p>
-
- <p id="p-3" class="p1"><span class="h2">Not missing</span> ·
- I’ve been totally public about my #1 gripe with Google: It’s a
- highly-centralized organization, based in a part of the world that I don’t
- much like. I’m not saying that’s a bad idea; it seems to be working for them.
- I’m not even saying that it’s a bad idea to do your next startup in the Bay
- Area, if you can handle the lifestyle.</p>
-
- <p>But I do think the Internet economy
- would be better and more humane if it didn’t have a single white-hot
- highly-overprivileged center. Also, sooner or later that’ll stop scaling.
- Can’t happen too soon.</p>
-
- <p>I’ve also talked about the other gripe: The distinction between “user” and
- “customer”. Yes, I understand why; see above. But in my four years at Google,
- I talked to an endless stream of developers and
- end-users<span class="dashes"> —</span> and enjoyed
- it<span class="dashes"> —</span> but never exchanged a single word with any of
- the actual customers paying the bills; which is to say, an advertiser. Maybe
- I’m weird, but that still sort of creeps me out.</p>
-
- <p>But I’m not <em>that</em> weird. Obviously, Google’s managers and owners
- and employees would all love new, non-advertising-focused, lines of
- business. The best candidates are Cloud and Docs/Apps. I think their chances
- are better in Docs/Apps, and yeah, maybe that’s because now I see how
- ruthlessly competitive the Cloud biz is.</p>
-
- <p id="p-4" class="p1"><span class="h2">Lucky again</span> ·
- This business has been so good to me. I have yet another gig where I’m
- broadly in sympathy with what my employer is trying to do, and getting paid
- well for it.</p>
-
- <p>From my current point-of-view, this gig is a winner.
- First, I’m in my home-town working in face-to-face mode. Second, I’m working
- for customers who pay actual money for actual services, and who I can talk to.
- And third, the customers are geeks just like me; understanding their problems
- is low-effort even when fixing them is hard.</p>
-
- <p>Oh, another bonus: I no longer have to read the Official Google Blog, or
- official Google statements on anything; a
- human being can only take so much relentless sunny-faced cheeriness.</p>
|